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Tulu language: Difference between revisions

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==Writing system==
==Writing system==
[[File:Tululipi4.svg|thumb|right|215px|alt=tigalari script.|Tigalari Script.]]
[[File:Tululipi4.svg|thumb|right|215px|alt=Tulu script script.|Tulu Script.]]
{{Main|Tigalari script|Kannada alphabet|Malayalam script}}
{{Main|Tulu script|Kannada alphabet|Malayalam script}}
The various historical inscriptions of Tulu found around Barkur and Kundapura are in the [[Tigalari script]]. Historically, Brahmins of [[Tulu Nadu]] and [[Havyaka Brahmin]]s used the Tigalari script to write [[Vedas]] and other [[Sanskrit]] works. The Tigalari script is descended from the [[Brahmi script|Brahmi]] through the [[Grantha script]]. It is a sister script of the [[Malayalam script]]. However, very few works written in vernacular languages like Kannada and Tulu are available. Hence, the Tigalari script was employed by Tulu Brahmins to write Tulu and Kannada languages apart from the Kannada script. The National Mission for Manuscripts has conducted several workshops on this script with the help of a scholar, Keladi Gunda Jois. In the 18th century, the use of the Kannada script for writing Tulu and non-availability of print in the Tigalari script contributed to the marginalization of the Tigalari script. The script is studied by few scholars and manuscriptologists for research and religious purposes. The [[Kannada script]] has become the contemporary script for the Tulu language gradually. All contemporary works and literature are done in the Kannada script.
The various historical inscriptions of Tulu found around Barkur and Kundapura are in the [[Tulu script]]. Historically, Brahmins of [[Tulu Nadu]] and [[Havyaka Brahmin]]s used the Tulu script to write [[Vedas]] and other [[Sanskrit]] works. The Tulu script is descended from the [[Brahmi script|Brahmi]] through the [[Grantha script]]. It is a sister script of the [[Malayalam script]]. However, very few works written in vernacular languages like Kannada and Tulu are available. Hence, the Tulu script was employed by Tulu Brahmins to write Tulu and Kannada languages apart from the Kannada script. The National Mission for Manuscripts has conducted several workshops on this script with the help of a scholar, Keladi Gunda Jois. In the 18th century, the use of the Kannada script for writing Tulu and non-availability of print in the Tulu script contributed to the marginalization of the Tulu script. The script is studied by few scholars and manuscriptologists for research and religious purposes. The [[Kannada script]] has become the contemporary script for the Tulu language gradually. All contemporary works and literature are done in the Kannada script.


The Tulu alphabet resembles the Malayalam script in many ways. It is also similar to many characters found in the Tigalari alphabet. This is from the same region in the state of Karnataka. The Tigalari and Kannada alphabets include a stress on vowels with "a" and "o" sounds. [http://www.omniglot.com/writing/tulu.htm <nowiki>[1]</nowiki>] Other vowels include sounds such as "au" "am" and "ah". Numerous consonants have their own origin from the Dravidian languages like "kha" "gha" "dha" and "jha". These are derived from the Tigalari alphabet.{{Clarification needed|date=October 2020}}
The Tulu alphabet resembles the Malayalam script in many ways. It is also similar to many characters found in the Tigalari alphabet. This is from the same region in the state of Karnataka. The Tigalari and Kannada alphabets include a stress on vowels with "a" and "o" sounds. [http://www.omniglot.com/writing/tulu.htm <nowiki>[1]</nowiki>] Other vowels include sounds such as "au" "am" and "ah". Numerous consonants have their own origin from the Dravidian languages like "kha" "gha" "dha" and "jha". These are derived from the Tigalari alphabet.{{Clarification needed|date=October 2020}}
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